Do the right thing : inside the movement that's bringing common sense back to America

A memoir by the evangelical presidential candidate traces the course of his grassroots campaign, explains how he garnered support by respecting the concerns of middle-class and working-class voters, and demonstrates how his example can be drawn on by conservatives to unify the Republican Party.

I love Iowa! --
Dude, where's my candidate? --
The best government of all --
Is there something about "created equal" you don't understand? --
Politically homeless --
Welcome to Washington, D.C.: The Roach Motel --
Elections by eBay --
Faux-cons: worse than liberalism --
Let them buy stocks! --
Let's get vertical --
The fairness and force of the fairtax --
Quit treating snakebites --
What you CAN do for your country! --
Big ideas don't have to mean big government: where do we go from here?

Resumen:

A memoir by the evangelical presidential candidate traces the course of his grassroots campaign, explains how he garnered support by respecting the concerns of middle-class and working-class voters, and demonstrates how his example can be drawn on by conservatives to unify the Republican Party.